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7 votes
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J. Michael Straczynski reveals painful origin story in Becoming Superman
4 votes -
The FBI thinks Long Island Iced Tea’s infamous pivot to blockchain was sweetened by insider trading
6 votes -
Multiple victims reported in shooting at Gilroy Garlic Festival
20 votes -
What are your thoughts on the Blloc phone?
10 votes -
The world’s last Blockbuster has no plans to close
10 votes -
Tax Watch UK report: Grand Theft Auto developer Rockstar has paid no UK corporate tax in ten years and claimed £42m in subsidies
6 votes -
Queer people of color reflect on being told to “go back”
8 votes -
Woman arrested for threatening to blow up Swedish embassy in Washington DC over A$AP Rocky case
8 votes -
Beyond Meat is working on fake bacon and steak
11 votes -
'I lost everything': The obscene cost of being a woman with a chronic health problem
7 votes -
What CIOs need to know about 5G: It isn’t time to get started with 5G implementations. But it IS time to plan
4 votes -
Do you live in a media bubble? Do you use Google News? I recommend using it signed-out at least 50% of the time
I recently started jumping around various browsers and machines. I sometimes keep instinctually going to Google News in all of these environments. I am often signed-out in these other browsers....
I recently started jumping around various browsers and machines. I sometimes keep instinctually going to Google News in all of these environments. I am often signed-out in these other browsers. This has been an eye-opening experience for me.
Many years ago I had blocked Fox, RT, and other crap out of my GNews feed. I was living in a bubble of my own making. I actually prefer that bubble, as there is more factual information in it, but it comes at a cost. I had lost a lot of my situational awareness of the political and media climate.
I am not trying to be centrist here, I just think that one should know the entire battlefield, not just the news given from their comfortable sources. For one thing, I had no idea of the dominance which Fox News had in Google News, also that RT was so prevalent, also that there was so many other sources of utter right-wing propaganda that had been normalized. How can I fight disinformation if I am unaware of its origins?
What do you think about this? Would you take me up on my challenge of reading the uncustomised news? Do you ever try to get out of your comfort zone in the news? Does it help inform you?
edit: Just FYI, to easily use Google News, or any other news site signed-out, first open a "private window" in your browser.
14 votes -
Digital Foundry Direct Retro - Nintendo's Famicom Disk System, a 1986 Japan-only mass-storage upgrade for the console
5 votes -
GitHub restricts developer accounts based in Iran, Crimea, and other countries under US sanctions
6 votes -
Any chance we can get a ~space group?
I know that this has been discussed before (I personally participated in some of that), but, to my knowledge, it's been quite a while since it was brought up. Currently, the three groups that seem...
I know that this has been discussed before (I personally participated in some of that), but, to my knowledge, it's been quite a while since it was brought up.
Currently, the three groups that seem to make the most sense for space exploration news are ~tech, ~science, and ~misc. Personally, I perceive ~tech as being best suited for general news about what's going on in the tech industry, more or less "hey, Google released this" or "these researchers are working on graphene batteries". Similarly, I understand ~science as a place for discussing scientific discoveries and "meta" discussion about science as a whole. I think that most would agree with me on those characterizations after looking at those groups when sorted by activity or new.
Space exploration, on the other hand, doesn't really fit in either. It's not exactly ~tech material, and it's also not really the right material for ~science, since much of it isn't about specific new discoveries or studies, etc. If we had an ~engineering, I would say that that would be the correct place for space discussion, but we don't have one.
If you look at what's been happening over the last few months in the realm of space exploration, I think that it's also pretty easy to see that there's enough going on to generate enough content and discussion for a dedicated group. There've been new launches on a weekly or biweekly basis, interesting moves made by different new entrants to the industry, all of the NASA Artemis news, plenty of things from SpaceX, etc.
35 votes -
How I made my own Android phone - in China
8 votes -
Socialist People's Party wants a debate on whether it should be legal to produce and sell French delicacy foie gras in the EU
8 votes -
Spotify Untold – Inside Spotify's ill-fated flirtation with TV and hardware
8 votes -
Native Hawaiians on coverage of Mauna Kea resistance
8 votes -
British trophy hunters paying to shoot 100 puffins at a time during trips to Iceland
7 votes -
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission appeals against Kimberly-Clark flushable wipes court decision
5 votes -
How Manchester United's pre-season friendly with Norwegian football team Kristiansund BK came about is scarcely believable
5 votes -
Iceland's prime minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir talks climate change and gender equality over ice cream
6 votes -
Finland's first sighting of golden jackal sets off political debate
8 votes -
Kyle "Bugha" Giersdorf, 16, wins Fortnite World Cup singles and $3 million
5 votes -
Finnish government plans to allow congestion charges in its cities
3 votes -
Deadly blast targets Afghan president's running mate
5 votes -
Tiny bombs in your blood - The complement system
5 votes -
John Romero discusses the development of Quake, which resulted in half of Id software including Romero leaving the company
17 votes -
Intersex liberation
7 votes -
Britain's deadliest path
8 votes -
History of Hong Kong (Pre-History to Colonial Period)
15 votes -
Trump says Daniel Coats, director of national intelligence, to step down
8 votes -
Would Donald Trump be president if all Americans actually voted?
17 votes -
Dissecting A Dweet: Ring Weave ~ a 140 byte javascript animation
9 votes -
Advice for starting a Wiki project
I am considering starting a wiki project for an academic niche. I've already started prototyping using Gitit, I've written a bit easy pages to get a feel for the software and am planning to start...
I am considering starting a wiki project for an academic niche. I've already started prototyping using Gitit, I've written a bit easy pages to get a feel for the software and am planning to start working on the most important page that summarises the topic itself, which I believe will help guide me to which pages to create first.
Now, here I'm asking for general advice to a newcomer n00bie wiki admin like me: what to expect, what software, etc. Any advice welcome, but I'll list a few questions below:
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What wiki software? I am liking Gitit, it is nice and easy to set up, and comes with its own server which I run with a systemctl user unit in the background. I tried Oddmuse but couldn't get it to work with a simple server; Ikiwiki setup is too clumsy for my liking (it friggin put stuff on my
$HOME
by default!); I want to avoid PHP stuff in general; I want a simple wiki that serves simple HTML pages. -
How to defend against spam? My plan is to keep it invite-only for as long as I can. IDK how to do that with Gitit yet.
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How to serve it securely and for cheap, once I decide to publish? It probably won't ever grow beyond a few dozens of megabytes in file size.
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How do you go about promoting a wiki?
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What peripheral services (issue tracker, mailing list, IRC/Discord/etc channels) go well with a wiki?
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What tools are available to ensure content quality (no plagiarism, enforce conventions, monitor changes, ...)?
13 votes -
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In Lebanon, Palestinians protest new employment restrictions
6 votes -
Democracy's Dilemma: Democracies rely on free exchange of ideas and information, but that can also be weaponized. How can democratic societies protect—and protect themselves from—this?
11 votes -
European Speedrunner Assembly's Summer 2019 event is live!
6 votes -
The man who’s going to save your neighborhood grocery store
7 votes -
The just transition for coal workers can start now. Colorado is showing how
9 votes -
Goodbye, Alan Moore: the king of comics bows out
15 votes -
Many US prisons deny Muslim inmates halal food and proper prayer
13 votes -
Twelve people shot at Brooklyn event
10 votes -
What was the most fulfilling thing you did this month?
As a respite from all the bad news floating around the internet, let's have some wholesome discussion! Whether it's major and minor, what was the best or most fulfilling thing you did this month?
19 votes -
Ohio just passed the worst energy bill of the 21st century
9 votes -
The internet is rotting – let’s embrace it
15 votes -
Heatwave threatens to accelerate ice melt in Greenland
7 votes -
Over two hundred dead reindeer found on Norway's Arctic Svalbard
10 votes